SF’s New Pedestrian Streets & Possible ‘Outdoor Dining’ Areas

The Great Highway has been closed to cars and open for bikes and pedestrians for weeks now. As car traffic around the city, the country, and the world has slowed down, the city is closing streets to cars in 20 different districts around San Francisco.

The SFMTA’s new ‘Slow Streets’ program is designed to limit through traffic on certain residential streets and allow them to be used more as a shared space for foot and bicycle traffic. Throughout the city, 20 corridors have been planned or implemented as a ‘Slow Streets’.

Here is a map of all the slow streets currently implemented (red), along with the ones who will be slow streets soon (Blue), and the streets currently being studied and reviewed for outdoor seating areas for restaurants on the street, parking spots, and sidewalks (Purple).

Slow Streets Currently Implemented:

41st Ave from Lincoln to Vicente

Excelsior between London and Prague

Kirkham from 18th to 7th ave

Lake from 28th Ave to Arguello

Lane between Oakdale and 3rd St

Page from Stanyan to Gough

Sanchez between 23rd St and 30th St

Shotwell between Cesar Chavez and 14th St

Slow Streets Planned:

20th Ave from Lincoln to Ortega

20th St between Valencia and Potrero

23rd Ave between Lake and Cabrillo

Chenery between Elk and Brompton

Golden Gate between Masonic and Broderick

Jarboe between Moultrie and Peralta

Kirkham from Great Highway to 18th Ave

Lombard between Jones and Stockton

Mariposa between Kansas and Texas

Ortega from Great Highway to 15th Ave

Somerset between Silver and Woosley

Stockton between Bay and Lombard

In North Beach & Fisherman’s Wharf, where there are as many restaurants and bars per capita as anywhere in the state, the idea for closed streets is very popular. Supervisor Aaron Peskin’s Office (D3 North Beach, Chinatown, Fisherman’s Wharf) is currently working with city officials to close off Upper Grant Ave., for outdoor seating areas. You know, the ‘Grant & Green’ corridor, where you may or may not have some fuzzy memories from your glory years outside The Saloon?

Small businesses like restaurants and bars desperately need to get back to serving, or perhaps they will have to close forever. The city has allowed small businesses to defer their rent payments, just like private tenants, but it may not be enough to save many of them. Rent deferral simply means small businesses are gathering large debts, to be paid back later, and restaurant margins are already razor thin in a healthy economy.

In San Francisco, petitions from small businesses (like this one) call for the Mayor to allow business to erect their own parklets, and to remove street parking in popular corridors so businesses can expand outdoors, where social distancing is possible.

This Memorial Day Weekend street closures at Geary and Steiner will be in effect to remove the pedestrian bridge. Beginning at 8:00 p.m. Friday evening on May 22, the area around Geary Boulevard and Steiner Street will be closed to traffic while crews work to demolish the bridge. Work will continue for 24 hours a day until the demolition is completed, which could continue as late as Monday evening. This isn’t part of the ‘slow streets’ initiative, it’s a construction project.

Geary & Steiner plans, image: SFMTA

In June, if new COVID cases continue to stay manageable, we may just see outdoor eating areas opened in certain areas. Of course, the logistics and safety measures for social distancing in outdoor dining areas, have to be worked out first.

In the meantime, enjoy the ‘slow streets’ near you!

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Alex Mak - Managing Editor

I'm the managin' editor here at Broke-Ass Stuart. I enjoy covering Bay Area News as well as writing about Arts, Culture & Nightlife.

When we're not writing, editing, or publishing articles, Stuart and I are promoting the good things in SF & NYC.

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